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Keysight
Keysight
from Wikipedia

Keysight Technologies, Inc. is an American company that manufactures electronics test and measurement equipment and software. The company was formed as a spin-off of Agilent Technologies, which inherited and rebranded the test and measurement product lines developed and produced, from the late 1960s to the turn of the millennium, by Hewlett-Packard's Test and Measurement division. Its name is a portmanteau of key and insight.[2][4]

Key Information

Products

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Keysight's products include hardware and software for benchtop, modular, and field instruments.[5] Instruments include oscilloscopes, multimeters, logic analyzers, signal generators, spectrum analyzers, vector network analyzers, atomic force microscopes (AFM), automated optical inspection, automated X-ray inspection (5DX), in-circuit testers, power supplies, tunable lasers, optical power meters, wavelength-meters, electro-optic converters, optical modulation analyzers and handheld tools.[6] In addition, it produces electronic design automation (EDA) software (PathWave Design division).[7] It mainly serves the telecommunications, aerospace/defense, industrial, computer, and semiconductor industries.[8]

History

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Acquisitions

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Keysight acquired British electronic measurement instrument maker Anite in 2015 for £388 million ($607 million).[9]

In 2017, Keysight acquired data technology company Ixia for about $US1.6 billion in cash.[10][11]

The company acquired British software testing company Eggplant Software from The Carlyle Group for $330 million in 2020.[12]

From 2019 to 2021, the company focused on 5G, introducing advanced products such as the Infiniium UXR-Series oscilloscopes. In 2023, the company acquired France-based ESI Group for approximately $1 billion.[13]

In 2024, Keysight outbid Viavi Solutions to acquire British telecommunications testing company Spirent for $1.5 billion.[14] That June, the US Department of Justice required the company to divest three of Spirent's businesses, prior to closing the sale, due to antitrust concerns.[15] The sale is closed October 15, 2025, including the regulatory required spin off of three divisions.[16][17]

Controversies

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On August 3, 2021, Keysight entered into a consent agreement with the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, Bureau of Political-Military Affairs, Department of State ("DTCC") to resolve alleged violations of the Arms Export Control Act and the International Traffic in Arms Regulations ("ITAR"). Pursuant to the consent agreement, Keysight was assessed a penalty of $6.6 million to be paid over three years, $2.5 million of which was suspended and designated for remediation activities over three years, including employment of a special compliance officer. The suspended portion of the penalty was satisfied by amounts spent on qualifying compliance activities. On April 23, 2024, Keysight made the final payment on the penalty, with the total amount then paid of $4.1 million. On May 3, 2024, Keysight submitted a letter to the DTCC certifying that it had implemented all aspects of the consent agreement and that the company's compliance program was adequate to identify, prevent, detect, correct, and report violations of the ITAR.[18][19][20]

Research and development

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From its launch in 2014 until 2020, Keysight increased its investment in R&D from approximately 12% to 16%, a percentage increase that represented almost a doubling of the investment in absolute dollars.[21]

Recognition

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Keysight won the 2014 Global Frost & Sullivan award for market leadership with $300 million in instrumentation software revenue, with its R&D investment of 12% of revenue ($365 million in 2013) cited as an important factor.[22][non-primary source needed]

Keysight was ranked #46th on Fortune's 100 Best Companies to Work For list in 2022.[23]

Time ranked the company #127th of 500 on its Worlds Most sustainable Companies of 2025 list.[24]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Keysight Technologies, Inc. is an American technology company headquartered in , that develops and delivers software-centric electronic design, emulation, and test solutions to accelerate innovation across industries including communications, , automotive, , and semiconductors. The company maintains market leadership through a comprehensive portfolio of hardware instruments—such as oscilloscopes, analyzers, signal generators, and network test equipment—complemented by advanced software for simulation, validation, and security assessment. Keysight's lineage traces to the , founded in 1939 by William Hewlett and in a Palo Alto garage, where early innovations like the audio oscillator laid the foundation for modern test and measurement technology. Following HP's restructuring, the electronic instruments division became Agilent Technologies in 1999, from which Keysight was spun off as an independent entity in November 2014 to focus exclusively on design and test solutions amid growing demand for high-speed networks and complex systems. This separation enabled Keysight to prioritize engineering-centric tools, distinguishing it from broader life sciences and chemical analysis pursuits retained by Agilent. With operations spanning over 100 countries and a workforce exceeding 15,000, Keysight supports critical advancements in 5G/6G wireless, AI-driven data centers, electric vehicles, and defense applications, often collaborating with enterprises to co-develop bespoke validation platforms that mitigate risks in product deployment. The firm's emphasis on precision measurement and emulation has positioned it as a key enabler for secure connectivity and sustainable technologies, evidenced by its role in standards development for bodies like 3GPP and IEEE.

Overview

Business Model and Market Position

Keysight Technologies operates a diversified focused on providing electronic design, emulation, , and measurement solutions to accelerate across industries. The company generates revenue primarily through hardware sales, including oscilloscopes, signal analyzers, network test , and parametric analyzers, which form the largest segment, alongside software licenses, subscriptions, and such as , , and consulting. This structure leverages a single investment across multiple instrument form factors and delivery modes, enabling multiple revenue streams from core R&D outputs. Recurring revenue from software and services has grown significantly, reaching over $1 billion annually by 2025 and comprising approximately 25% of , driven by demand for simulation tools, data analytics, and as-a-service models in areas like AI validation and . In fiscal year 2024, Keysight reported total revenue of $4.98 billion, reflecting a decline from $5.46 billion in the prior year amid market headwinds, though the company anticipated 7% revenue growth for fiscal 2025, fueled by AI-related demand in wireline testing and communications infrastructure. The model emphasizes heavy investment in R&D—approximately 15-18% of revenue annually—and global sales expansion to serve over 40,000 customers, with a focus on high-margin segments like software to mitigate cyclicality in hardware sales. Keysight maintains a leading market position in the electronic test and measurement industry, operating within a valued at around $20.9 billion as of recent estimates, characterized by long-term growth drivers such as / deployments, AI infrastructure, electric vehicles, and advancements. The company derives roughly two-thirds of its revenue from communications solutions, including network validation and device testing, while the remaining from electronic industrial applications in , defense, automotive, and general , providing diversification against sector-specific downturns. With over 3,800 patents and a history of industry-first innovations, Keysight competes effectively against rivals like and , holding strong shares in high-frequency signal analysis and modular instrumentation, bolstered by its S&P 500 status and global footprint spanning more than 100 countries. In third-quarter 2025, revenue reached $1.35 billion, up 10.7% year-over-year, underscoring resilience and positioning in recovering demand for AI and wireline technologies.

Leadership and Operations

Satish Dhanasekaran serves as president and chief executive officer of Keysight Technologies, having assumed the role on May 1, 2022, succeeding Ron Nersesian. Nersesian, who led the company as CEO from its 2014 spin-off until 2022, transitioned to executive chairman before becoming non-executive board chair. The executive leadership team includes Neil Dougherty as , responsible for financial and operations; Gooi Soon Chai overseeing enterprise services; and Niels Faché managing the design engineering software portfolio. Recent transitions include the appointment of Ingrid Estrada as senior vice president and chief supply chain and operations officer on May 27, 2025, focusing on and . Jodi Juskie was named senior vice president and chief people officer on the same date, succeeding Estrada in leadership. In November 2024, Steve Yoon was elevated to senior vice president of global sales, replacing retiring executive . Keysight Technologies maintains its corporate headquarters at 1400 Fountaingrove Parkway in , which has served as the base since the company's formation. The company employs approximately 15,000 people worldwide, with over 5,000 in the United States across multiple facilities. Operations emphasize in test and , supported by a global network of sales, service, and manufacturing sites, including key activities in transparency and employee development programs.

History

Origins in Hewlett-Packard and Agilent

Keysight Technologies traces its origins to (HP), founded on January 1, 1939, by William R. Hewlett and in a garage. HP's early focus included , with its first product, the Model 200A audio oscillator, commercialized in 1940 for use in sound engineering and wartime applications. The company expanded into precision measurement instruments, producing oscilloscopes as early as 1940 and later spectrum analyzers, signal generators, and network analyzers that became industry standards for electronics design and testing. By the 1970s and 1980s, HP's Electronic Measurements Group had established dominance in high-frequency and RF measurement technologies, driven by innovations in semiconductor testing and communications infrastructure. In November 1999, HP restructured to concentrate on and by spinning off its test and , components, chemical analysis, and medical products businesses into Agilent Technologies. This separation, announced in July 1999, resulted in Agilent's on November 18, 1999, raising $2.1 billion in the largest IPO to date. Agilent inherited HP's legacy test and division, headquartered in , and continued developing advanced instruments for , wireless communications, and aerospace applications. Under Agilent, the division maintained HP's commitment to accuracy and innovation, incorporating and modular architectures to meet evolving demands in high-speed data and precursor technologies.

Spin-off and Formation

On September 19, 2013, Agilent Technologies announced its plan to separate its electronic measurement business into an independent publicly traded company through a tax-free spin-off to Agilent shareholders, allowing each entity to focus on distinct markets—Agilent on life sciences, diagnostics, and applied chemical analysis, and the new entity on electronic design and solutions. The electronic measurement segment, which generated approximately $2.9 billion in fiscal year 2013 revenue and employed about 9,500 people, traced its roots to Hewlett-Packard's original and operations but had grown into a standalone leader in RF/, high-speed digital, and communications testing. The spin-off company was named Keysight Technologies on January 7, , with Ron Nersesian, previously president and CEO of Agilent's electronic measurement group, appointed as its president and CEO; the headquarters was established in . Keysight began operating as a wholly owned of Agilent on August 1, , undergoing operational separation including dedicated , HR, and IT functions. On September 17, , Agilent's board approved the separation and declared a special stock dividend, distributing one share of Keysight for every two shares of Agilent held by shareholders of record as of October 22, ; the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission declared Keysight's Form 10 registration statement effective on October 6, . The spin-off was completed on November 1, 2014, when Agilent distributed 100% of Keysight's outstanding to its shareholders in a tax-free transaction, with Keysight assuming the electronic measurement business's assets, liabilities, and operations as a newly formed entity incorporated in . Trading of Keysight's on the under the ticker symbol "KEYS" commenced on November 3, 2014, marking the company's debut as an independent entity focused on accelerating innovation in electronics through design, emulation, and solutions. This separation enabled Keysight to operate without Agilent's ownership, pursuing targeted investments in high-growth areas like , , and while inheriting a portfolio of established and measurement instruments.

Key Milestones Post-2014

In 2015, Keysight expanded its wireless testing capabilities through the acquisition of Anite plc, a provider of software solutions for device, , and network testing. The company launched the X-Series signal analyzers featuring 1 GHz analysis bandwidth in 2016, enhancing signal analysis for complex modulation formats, and established a Center in in partnership with the Georgia Institute of Technology to advance electronic design automation tools. Keysight acquired in 2017 for $1.6 billion, integrating advanced network test and visibility solutions, and also purchased ScienLab to bolster eMobility testing for electric vehicles and batteries. In , it introduced the PathWave design software platform for integrated RF, microwave, and high-speed digital workflows, debuted the industry's first New Radio (NR)-ready channel emulation solution, and was added to the index on November 6. The Infiniium UXR-Series oscilloscopes, offering up to 110 GHz bandwidth, were launched in 2019, positioning Keysight as a leader in high-performance real-time oscilloscopes, while the company joined the EU's flagship to influence next-generation standards. By 2020, Keysight was recognized as the global market leader in oscilloscopes by , released the Infiniium MXR-Series with integrated 8-channel real-time spectrum analysis, and acquired to enhance software for digital experiences. In 2021, Keysight introduced the Scene Emulator for over-the-air testing of automotive radars and acquired SCALABLE Network Technologies, Sanjole, and Quantum Benchmark to strengthen and performance testing; it also committed to net-zero by 2040. Satish Dhanasekaran assumed the role of president and CEO in 2022, succeeding Ron Nereson; the company launched the four-channel VXG vector supporting frequencies up to 54 GHz for and applications, and completed acquisitions of Micram (mmWave ICs), Quamotion ( testing), Verisco (cyber-physical systems), and Nordsys (automotive cybersecurity). The next-generation MXG X-Series vector signal generator was unveiled in 2023, offering improved phase noise for aerospace and defense radar testing, alongside acquisitions of Cliosoft (design data management) and ESI Group (simulation software for virtual prototyping). Marking its 10-year anniversary in 2024, Keysight launched the Infiniium HD3 Series oscilloscope with 12-bit resolution for enhanced signal fidelity in power integrity and compliance testing, and acquired AnaPico (ultra-fast signal sources), Riscure (device security testing), and Easics (chiplet integration IP). In 2025, Keysight completed major acquisitions including on October 15 for $1.46 billion to expand test automation for networks and positioning, the Optical Solutions Group from on October 17 to advance photonic design and verification, and from Ansys to enhance low-power analysis tools; it also received Frost & Sullivan's 2025 Global Company of the Year Award for test and measurement leadership, including the first FCC license for sub-terahertz testing.

Products and Solutions

Test and Measurement Equipment

Keysight Technologies offers a comprehensive portfolio of test and measurement instruments designed for electronic design, validation, manufacturing, and compliance testing across industries including communications, , automotive, and semiconductors. These instruments encompass hardware solutions for signal , analysis, and acquisition, emphasizing high precision, speed, and integration with software for advanced applications such as RF/ testing and high-speed digital validation. Oscilloscopes form a core product line, with the InfiniiVision series providing bandwidths from 70 MHz to 2.5 GHz for general-purpose and the Infiniium series offering real-time sampling up to 256 GHz for high-speed serial . Signal and spectrum analyzers, including the X-Series, deliver coverage from 2 Hz to 110 GHz with features like extension for low-level signal detection, supporting standards testing and modulation analysis. Network analyzers, such as the PNA family, enable vector measurements of S-parameters with exceeding 130 dB and up to 145 GHz range, used for characterizing components like amplifiers and antennas. Additional equipment includes waveform generators for arbitrary signal creation up to 100 GHz, power supplies with precision sourcing, and modular PXI/AXIe systems for scalable, high-density testing in automated environments. In 2025, Keysight introduced the Smart Bench Essentials Plus bundle, integrating oscilloscopes, multimeters, generators, and supplies for enhanced reliability in benchtop setups. These instruments support emerging needs, such as end-of-line testing for batteries via the EV2020B platform and AI data center validation with high-bandwidth tools. Keysight's equipment prioritizes measurement accuracy, with traceable calibrations and application-specific software to minimize errors in complex systems like and AI infrastructure.

Software and Services

Keysight's software portfolio centers on the PathWave platform, which integrates (EDA), simulation, and tools to accelerate workflows in high-frequency, RF, and digital design applications. PathWave enables quicker insights through , faster simulations, and measurement analysis, supporting industries such as communications, , and semiconductors. Key components include PathWave , built on the open-source OpenTAP framework, which modularizes test sequences to reduce development time and costs by up to 50% in complex validation scenarios. Within PathWave, specialized suites address instrument control and data management. PathWave BenchVue Software facilitates multi-instrument synchronization, real-time data capture, and export in formats like or Excel, streamlining bench-level testing without custom coding. For EDA, tools like Advanced Design System (ADS) and provide circuit simulation, electromagnetic modeling, and high-speed digital verification, with recent enhancements incorporating AI-driven optimization for / and quantum applications. Electromagnetic design software such as EMPro supports for antenna and PCB analysis, integrating with hardware for hybrid simulation-test environments. Instrument-specific measurement software complements hardware offerings, including applications for oscilloscopes, network analyzers, and signal generators. These tools offer real-time visualization, protocol decoding, and compliance testing for standards like PCIe and USB4, with features for automated pass/fail criteria and report generation. In 2025, Keysight expanded its design software capabilities through acquisitions enhancing optical and photonic simulation tools, adding predictive modeling for laser systems and integrated photonics. Keysight's services portfolio emphasizes lifecycle support, including precision traceable to national standards, performed at over 40 global centers to maintain instrument accuracy within 0.1% tolerances for critical measurements. Repair services utilize AI-driven diagnostics for , reducing downtime by analyzing usage patterns from connected instruments. Managed services extend to consulting for test strategy optimization, test-as-a-service for scalable validation in automotive and defense sectors, and software assurance programs like KeysightCare, which provide priority support and updates under subscription models starting at annual fees scaled to equipment value. Training programs, delivered via in-person or virtual formats, cover software integration and compliance testing, with certifications ensuring operator proficiency in PathWave ecosystems. These services generated approximately 12% of Keysight's in 2024, reflecting their role in sustaining long-term customer deployments.

Research and Development

Innovation Strategy

Keysight Technologies' innovation strategy emphasizes software-centric solutions that integrate , emulation, and testing to enable customers to accelerate breakthroughs in complex technologies such as / communications, AI infrastructure, and data centers. This approach prioritizes reducing development risks and time-to-market through tools like digital twins and AI-driven optimization, aligning with the company's mission to connect and secure the world via empirical advancements in measurement accuracy and scalability. By focusing on customer-centric outcomes rather than isolated hardware, Keysight differentiates itself in the test and measurement sector, where hardware alone often limits adaptability to rapid technological shifts. The company commits substantial resources to , allocating approximately 15-16% of annual revenue to R&D initiatives that drive above-market growth and market share gains. In 2024, this investment supported advancements in , with software and services growing faster than overall revenue, reflecting a strategic pivot toward recurring, high-margin solutions. Keysight's disciplined capital management balances these expenditures with profitability, ensuring R&D yields verifiable returns through enhanced testing efficiency and new product capabilities. Key focus areas include AI and for automating design processes, such as RFIC optimization to boost U.S. competitiveness, and ethical AI applications in testing for networks. Collaborations with universities and industry partners, like those enhancing AI/ML testing accuracy, underscore a strategy grounded in shared empirical validation over proprietary silos. This extends to sustainable innovations in clean tech, including electromobility and efficiency, where measurement tools address causal challenges in energy systems. Outcomes of this strategy are evident in Keysight's leadership in high-performance solutions for AI data centers and optical innovations, demonstrated at events like ECOC 2025, where tools for infrastructure reduced deployment risks. The approach has earned recognition for aligning R&D with market needs, such as scalable testing, while maintaining a focus on verifiable performance metrics over speculative trends.

Patents and Technological Contributions

Keysight Technologies holds a global patent portfolio comprising 2,318 patents, with 1,793 granted and over 78% actively maintained, reflecting sustained investment in protection for test and measurement advancements. These patents span core areas such as signal analysis, frequency measurement, and device characterization, derived from annual R&D expenditures of $919 million in fiscal 2024, which emphasize of hardware and software to enable rapid deployment of solutions in communications, , and sectors. This R&D focus has positioned Keysight as a leader in high-precision , with innovations addressing challenges like and high-speed essential for modern electronic design workflows. In technological contributions, Keysight has pioneered enhancements in oscilloscopes, network analyzers, and spectrum analyzers, including patents for spectrum emission mask compliance testing that optimize measurement efficiency by reorganizing frequency band evaluations (U.S. Patent No. 7,106,790). The company has also advanced source measure units with integrated feedback and measurement paths to improve accuracy in low-level current and voltage testing (U.S. Patent No. 11,619,666). Further innovations include methods for mitigating measurement system instabilities in S-parameter analysis of devices under test (U.S. Patent No. 11,209,471), enabling more reliable characterization of RF and microwave components. Keysight's programmable control instruments leverage field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) for flexible , as detailed in patents covering hardware configurations for integrated and emulation (U.S. Patent No. 10,324,436). In emerging domains, contributions extend to research, where Keysight's test platforms support terahertz-frequency validation and AI-driven network optimization, earning recognition as the 2025 Global Company of the Year in test and measurement from for accelerating industry standards development. These efforts underscore Keysight's role in foundational technologies for next-generation connectivity, with patents like those for oscillator frequency stability measurement (U.S. Patent No. 8,933,706) supporting applications in precision timing and . Overall, Keysight's patent-driven strategy prioritizes empirical validation of techniques, contributing to industry benchmarks in bit testing for eye compliance and automated final assembly verification in production environments. This body of work, built on first-mover R&D, sustains competitive edges in markets demanding sub-picosecond accuracy and multi-domain simulation.

Acquisitions and Strategic Expansion

Major Acquisitions

In 2015, Keysight acquired Anite plc, a British provider of software solutions for wireless research and development, for approximately $600 million in cash. The deal, completed on August 13, expanded Keysight's capabilities in device conformance testing and network optimization tools. Keysight's largest acquisition occurred in 2017 with the purchase of , a developer of network test hardware and software, for $1.6 billion in an all-cash transaction finalized on April 18. This integration added comprehensive network visibility, cybersecurity validation, and performance testing across OSI layers 2 through 7, targeting and cloud environments. In October 2025, Keysight completed the acquisition of Communications plc for approximately $1.46 billion (£1.16 billion), following regulatory approvals including a U.S. Department of Justice-mandated divestiture of certain assets to address antitrust concerns in high-speed Ethernet and testing. The transaction, valued at 202.5 pence per share (including 199 pence in cash plus a 3.5 pence special ), bolstered Keysent's portfolio in , positioning technologies, and service assurance for / and satellite applications. Concurrent with the deal, Keysight acquired ' Optical Solutions Group and ' PowerArtist on October 17, 2025, to advance photonic design and pre-synthesis power analysis tools for and multi-physics engineering workflows. These moves align with Keysight's strategy to integrate software-driven solutions for and optical communications.

Recent Transactions and Regulatory Challenges

In October 2025, Keysight Technologies completed the acquisition of Communications plc for $1.46 billion on October 15, enhancing its portfolio in network and cybersecurity testing technologies. Two days later, on October 17, the company finalized purchases of ' Optical Solutions Group for optical and photonic design software and ' PowerArtist for low-power design verification tools, contributing to a combined transaction value of approximately $1.7 billion across these deals. These moves targeted expansion in high-growth areas such as AI-driven networking, / validation, and design workflows. The acquisition encountered significant antitrust hurdles. On June 2, 2025, the U.S. Department of Justice filed a civil complaint under Section 7 of the Clayton Act, contending the merger would substantially reduce competition in markets for high-speed Ethernet testing, testing appliances, and RF channel emulation systems, potentially leading to higher prices and reduced innovation for customers. To resolve these concerns, the DOJ mandated divestiture of the implicated business units to Viavi Solutions, approved on June 3, 2025, allowing the transaction to proceed under oversight. China's (SAMR) also imposed conditions, granting conditional approval on September 28, 2025, via a hybrid remedy that included behavioral commitments and asset divestitures to mitigate overlaps in testing equipment markets amid rising AI infrastructure demands. This scrutiny reflected broader regulatory focus on consolidation in specialized testing sectors, though both agencies cleared the deal without blocking it outright. No similar challenges were reported for the or asset purchases, which fell below major jurisdictional thresholds.

Financial Performance

Keysight Technologies operates two primary reportable segments: the Communications Solutions Group (CSG), which delivers test and measurement solutions for communications ecosystems including / networks, systems, and infrastructure; and the Electronic Industrial Solutions Group (EISG), which provides instruments and software for applications in aerospace and defense, automotive, energy, semiconductors, and general electronics testing. Total revenue for fiscal year 2024 (ended October 31, 2024) stood at $4.98 billion, reflecting an 8.9% decline from $5.46 billion in fiscal 2023, driven by reduced demand in equipment and markets amid corrections and macroeconomic pressures. CSG, comprising about 69% of total revenue, contributed approximately $3.43 billion in FY2024, while EISG generated $1.6 billion, a 12% year-over-year decrease attributed to softening test demand despite AI-related growth pockets. Fiscal 2025 marked a rebound, with quarterly revenues increasing sequentially and year-over-year: Q1 at $1.30 billion (up 3% YoY), Q2 at $1.31 billion (up 7% YoY), and Q3 at $1.35 billion (up 11% YoY), fueled by strengthening orders in communications R&D and industrial applications. Both CSG and EISG posted 11% YoY growth in Q3 2025, the second consecutive quarter of EISG expansion, signaling broad-based recovery. Full-year FY2025 revenue is forecasted at $5.3 billion, a 6% rise over FY2024, with core growth excluding acquisitions projected at 5-7%. Software and services, emphasizing recurring revenue streams, accounted for 36% of Q3 2025 total revenue, with recurring elements at 28%, up from prior periods and supporting margin stability amid hardware cyclicality.
Fiscal YearTotal Revenue ($ billions)CSG Share (%)EISG Revenue ($ billions)
20235.46~70~1.66
20244.98691.6

Profitability and Market Challenges

Keysight Technologies has demonstrated resilient profitability metrics amid cyclical industry pressures. In the third quarter of 2025 (ended July 31, 2025), the company achieved a gross margin of 59.5% and a non-GAAP gross margin of 63.9%, with a non-GAAP of 25.0%. net income stood at $191 million, or $1.10 per share, while non-GAAP reached $1.72, reflecting a 9% year-over-year increase. For the trailing twelve months as of July 2025, the was 18.12% and 10.38%. Fiscal year 2024 saw decline 8.88% to $4.98 billion, driven by reduced demand in communications solutions and industrial end markets, which account for the majority of Keysight's sales. This contraction reflected broader market softness following peak investments in infrastructure and testing, leading to adjustments by customers. Profitability held firm through cost controls and a shift toward higher-margin software and services, which comprised 36% of Q3 2025 , including 28% recurring. Market challenges persist into fiscal 2025, including incremental U.S. tariffs on imported components, which have delayed mitigation efforts and pressured near-term margins. Keysight responded by implementing cost actions, enabling it to raise full-year guidance to 7% growth despite these headwinds, with non-GAAP EPS expected to rise approximately 13%. Dependency on volatile sectors like , defense, and automotive electrification exposes the firm to disruptions and geopolitical risks, though Q3 2025 orders grew 7% year-over-year, signaling recovery. Analysts note ongoing pressure to sustain margin expansion amid R&D investments and competitive pricing in test equipment markets.

Controversies and Criticisms

Export Control Violations

In August 2021, the U.S. Department of State's Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC) reached a consent agreement with Keysight Technologies, Inc., imposing a $6.6 million for 24 alleged violations of the (AECA) and the (ITAR). The violations stemmed from Keysight's exports of proprietary software for testing and analysis—initially classified by the company as EAR99 items under the (EAR)—to foreign nationals in 17 countries, including and , between December 2015 and April 2018, without required ITAR licenses or authorizations. DDTC determined the software constituted ITAR-controlled technical data due to its potential applications, such as enabling defense-related radar simulations, and cited Keysight's failure to seek commodity jurisdiction determinations as a key factor. Aggravating circumstances included Keysight's continuation of similar exports during the DDTC investigation and inadequate internal classification processes post-acquisition of the software's developer. Of the $6.6 million penalty, $2.5 million was suspended contingent on Keysight implementing and funding enhancements to its export compliance program, including improved classification training, automated screening tools, and independent audits over a three-year period. Keysight voluntarily self-disclosed the issues after re-evaluating the software's jurisdiction following DDTC inquiries, which mitigated the penalty but did not eliminate it due to the volume and persistence of the exports. Separately, in September 2020, Keysight settled with the U.S. Department of the Treasury's (OFAC) for $473,157 in potential civil liability arising from its 2016 acquisition of Anite Oy, which had exported testing equipment incorporating over 10% U.S.-origin content to between 2013 and 2015, in violation of U.S. sanctions regulations. OFAC deemed the conduct an apparent violation of the Iranian Transactions and Sanctions Regulations (ITSR), noting Keysight's , remedial actions like enhanced transaction screening, and lack of sophisticated evasion as mitigating factors, though the pre-acquisition nature of the exports underscored gaps in post-merger . No additional violations by Keysight have been publicly reported as of October 2025.

Product Security Vulnerabilities

Keysight products, particularly in network testing and visibility solutions, have been affected by several disclosed security vulnerabilities, primarily involving remote code execution, hardcoded credentials, and data exposure risks. These issues have been documented in (CVEs) and addressed through Keysight's security advisory program, with patches or mitigations recommended for affected firmware and software versions. As of 2025, Keysight reports no confirmed exploitation in the wild for its major advisories, though the potential for compromise in operational environments underscores risks in test equipment deployed in enterprise and critical infrastructure networks. A critical vulnerability, CVE-2023-1967, impacts the discontinued Data Analytics Web Service Software (model N8844A) and enables remote execution via improper input validation in the web interface. Disclosed on , 2023, it affects versions prior to the provided patch, allowing authenticated users with elevated privileges to execute arbitrary if exploited. Keysight advised immediate application of the fix or discontinuation of the software, noting its integration in certain signal analysis systems. Similarly, CVE-2023-1860 in the Hawkeye software (version 3.3.16.28) involves an unspecified flaw in the "/ixia-hawkeye//v1/sensors" endpoint, rated as medium severity, which could lead to unauthorized access or disruption. In the Ixia Vision product family, used for network packet brokering, multiple high- and medium-severity issues were identified in early 2025, including path traversal, XML external entity processing flaws, and CVE-2025-24525 involving hardcoded cryptographic material. The latter, detailed in CISA advisory ICSA-25-063-02 on September 30, 2025, permits attackers to intercept or decrypt payloads, affecting versions up to 6.3.1 of the Vision Network Packet Broker. Keysight urged upgrades to patched (version 6.4.0 or later) and to mitigate remote compromise risks, emphasizing that older versions remain vulnerable if unpatched. Additional research from in August 2022 highlighted remote code execution paths in the Sensor Management Server, exploitable via deserialization flaws in versions before 2.4.3, prompting Keysight to issue updates and encourage vulnerability reporting. Other firmware-specific risks include untrusted data deserialization in the N6854A Geolocation Server (versions up to 2.4.2), enabling for malicious actors with network access. Keysight maintains an active disclosure process, integrating into security, though critics note that reliance on customer patching in specialized hardware can delay remediation in deployed systems. Overall, these incidents reflect broader challenges in securing for measurement instruments, where default configurations and legacy integrations amplify exposure.

Antitrust and Competitive Issues

In 2024, Keysight Technologies announced its intent to acquire Communications plc for approximately $1.5 billion, aiming to expand capabilities in network testing and emulation amid growing demand for AI and data center infrastructure validation. The proposed transaction drew antitrust scrutiny from U.S. and Chinese regulators due to overlapping product lines in communications testing equipment, where Keysight and were identified as direct competitors. On June 2, 2025, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) filed a civil antitrust lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to block the acquisition, alleging it would violate Section 7 of the Clayton Act by substantially lessening competition in three specific markets: high-speed ethernet testing equipment, network security testing equipment, and RF channel emulation products. The DOJ complaint noted that the merged entity would control significant market shares—exceeding 85% in certain segments—with limited alternative suppliers, potentially leading to higher prices and reduced innovation for customers in telecommunications and data networking. To resolve these concerns, the DOJ proposed a consent decree requiring Keysight to divest Spirent's entire high-speed ethernet testing business, network security testing business, and RF channel emulation business to a DOJ-approved buyer within specified timelines, preserving post-merger competition. China's (SAMR) extended its review of the deal multiple times, pausing the clock in August 2025 amid evaluations of AI-related testing market dynamics. On September 28, 2025, SAMR conditionally approved the acquisition, imposing a hybrid remedy that included divestitures of overlapping assets similar to those mandated by the DOJ, alongside behavioral commitments to maintain competition in high-speed network testing. These regulatory interventions highlighted Keysight's dominant position in specialized electronic markets but were resolved without broader allegations of monopolistic practices outside the merger context. No independent complaints regarding Keysight's standalone competitive conduct, such as or exclusionary tactics, have been publicly documented by enforcement agencies.

Industry Impact and Recognition

Technological Advancements Enabled

Keysight's measurement and test solutions have facilitated breakthroughs in quantum computing by providing scalable control systems essential for qubit management and experimentation. In July 2025, Keysight installed the world's largest commercial quantum control system at Japan's National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), capable of supporting over 1,000 superconducting qubits, which advances scalable quantum hardware development by enabling precise pulse generation and readout for large-scale quantum processors. Additionally, in September 2024, Keysight introduced quantum circuit simulation software incorporating frequency-domain flux quantization in collaboration with Google Quantum AI, allowing engineers to model complex quantum behaviors more accurately and accelerate chip design iterations. These tools address key bottlenecks in quantum hardware fidelity and error correction, enabling progress toward fault-tolerant quantum systems. In wireless communications, Keysight's emulation platforms have underpinned 5G deployment and laid groundwork for 6G by verifying network performance against 3GPP standards. Their 5G network emulation solutions, updated to support the latest releases as of 2023, have enabled device manufacturers to test end-to-end connectivity, including massive MIMO and mmWave bands, ensuring compliance and reliability for commercial rollouts that now serve billions of connections globally. For 6G, Keysight's innovations in AI-integrated testing scale to terahertz frequencies and integrate with cross-industry applications, such as autonomous systems, by simulating extreme data rates and low-latency scenarios critical for emerging use cases like holographic communications. Keysight has also driven advancements through specialized test equipment for s and chiplets, enhancing design efficiency amid rising complexity. In January 2025, Keysight expanded support for Universal Chiplet Interconnect Express (UCIe) 2.0 and standards, allowing validation of high-speed interconnects in multi-die packages that reduce latency and power consumption in centers and AI accelerators. Their AI-accelerated tools, proposed for U.S. competitiveness initiatives, automate optimization processes, shortening development cycles for next-generation chips used in defense and . With over 3,800 patents underpinning these capabilities—many focused on and emulation—Keysight's contributions extend to O-RAN compliance testing, fostering open, interoperable networks that lower barriers for and beyond infrastructure.

Awards and Industry Standing

Keysight Technologies maintains a leading position in the electronic test and measurement industry, particularly in RF, , and high-speed digital testing solutions essential for communications, semiconductors, and applications. The company operates within a global market valued at approximately $20.9 billion, where it emphasizes technology leadership to deliver first-to-market instruments supporting trends such as / deployment, electric vehicles, and advanced semiconductors. Keysight, alongside competitors like and , accounts for a significant portion of the market, with the top players collectively holding around 15% share in the broader test and measurement equipment sector as of 2023 data. In recognition of its innovations, Keysight received Frost & Sullivan's 2025 Global Company of the Year Award for excellence in test and measurement, highlighting its contributions to early research through advanced simulation and over-the-air testing capabilities. At the 2025 EM Innovation Awards, the company earned Best Supplier of the Year (Reader's Choice) and an award for advancements in testing, underscoring its influence in electromagnetic and high-frequency design tools. These accolades build on prior recognitions, such as the Lightwave Innovation Review Award for forward error correction-aware receiver testing in 2020, affirming Keysight's role in enabling and optical networking advancements. Keysight's industry standing is further evidenced by sustainability and operational excellence rankings, including placement at 127th overall and 11th in its sector on TIME's 2025 World's Most Sustainable Companies list, based on metrics like environmental transparency and . As an employer, it has been certified as a Great Place to Work and ranked among the World's Best Employers, reflecting strong internal practices that support its market competitiveness. Overall, these honors position Keysight as a pivotal innovator in technologies critical to emerging high-tech ecosystems.

References

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